31

4.

(11)

The supply to China of newspapers, periodicals (scientific and otherwise) books (including reference. books and text books), chemicals and apparatus. Very little educational muterial

any kind has been reaching China for a considerable time owing to the war situation.

(111) help in meeting nurdships arising from the

abnormal increase in the cost of living and other privations due to the war.

sub-divided

(a)

(b)

(0)

sith reard to (1) the exonemes my be into:

Exchange visits of prominent educationists to establish contacts, survey needs and possibilities and promoto general good will.

Lxchange of „raduate students to undertake specific research work for defined periods.

Exchange of visits between mixed (i.e. boys and girls, teams of chinese and Indian students for debates, gales, etc. with the main object of promotin, wider understanding of each others point of view among the younger generations of the respective countries.

(a) may be taken to include exchange visits of prominent Indians and Chinose not necessarily connected Bolely or even primarily with education. I am sutisfied from my own experience that such visits at reasonably frequent, but not too frequent, intervals can do nothing but good. I have not made any sugestions for the exchange of what I might oull ordinary university students between Chins and India, since I get the impression that, so far as normal degree courses in ordinary academic subjects are concerned, the chinese feel with justification that they can probably set as much in one of their om universities as they could in an indian university, and that a Chinese student seeking a foreign degree would prefer to go to aerica or Great Britain in view of the greater commercial value which is attached to degree obtained in these places. The

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